Insights

Insights

The Unimaginable Suffering

The death of Jesus on the cross was one he shrank back from, so horrendous was the prospect.  In Gethsemane, “horror and dismay overcame him, and he said,…“My heart is ready to break with grief.” (Mark 14:4, NEB).

Three main things brought this horror, and none of them had to do with the excruciating physical pain he would suffer in scourging and crucifixion, or the emotional pain he would suffer in being abandoned and betrayed by his disciples. The horror before Him was far greater than those.

First He was to become sin.  The ugliness, the stench, the squalor, the repulsiveness of sin, these he would become.  Think of being lowered into a pit of liquid manure, its greenish surface roiling with maggots, the stench overwhelming; and as you go down into it, it gets into your eyes, nose, mouth, and then lungs, engulfing you in its terribleness.  This is nothing compared to Christ’s becoming sin for us, the evil of it entering His very being.

Then He was under the righteous wrath of God which had been stored up from the beginning of the world against all the sin ever committed and which would be committed.  The unimaginably immense weight of wrath crashed down on Jesus, breaking and crushing him.

In the third and most painful suffering, Jesus was ripped out of the relationship of the Trinity, the perfect place, the unflawed unity, the beautiful balance, the wonderful warmth that had existed from eternity. As He became sin and had wrath poured upon Him, He could not stay in that intimate relationship with the Father and Spirit.    The fabric of the Trinity was torn, the essence smashed, the unity destroyed. This brought the greatest suffering of His sacrifice, not only to Jesus, but to the Father and the Spirit also.

The amount of horror for Jesus in this experience was immeasurably, unimaginably huge.  It was an infinite suffering borne by an infinite heart of love under an infinite wrath.  And it brought about an infinite solution for finite beings.  Only the God who is Love could do this.  Only Jesus could be our Savior, willing to go through suffering which was beyond the comprehension of angels. And He did it to save those who are lower than Angels.  Halleluah!

Nurturing Revival In Your Life

Yesterday was a test for me as I set off to do errands, 14 in all.  I’d prayed about them and most of them went smoothly except two: the last, and most desired ones.  My natural reaction was to focus on these unaccomplished items, to be distressed and upset.

However, as part of the on-going revival in my life, the Holy Spirit reminded me of the habitual sins I had “confessed ahead” just that morning: complaining instead of praising, idol worship (“If this doesn’t work out, I can’t be happy), critical, negative thinking and selfishness.  So, with His help, I deliberately chose to reject these and instead to praise Him for what couldn’t be done, to thank Him for what was accomplished.

With His guidance, I chose to “let go of the temporal, hold on to the eternal and rise above.”   There is such freedom in this; when I got home, I could be pleasant and positive with my little wife, having no burden of discontent.

What keeps this revival going?   There are four principles which open the way to continual refreshment in my life.

1.  Small things repeated often are powerful.

Taking vitamins and brushing your teeth regularly bring long term results.

Regular quiet time brings bigger changes:  the disciplines of daily worship, confession, being in  the Word and prayer–these are cooperation with the Spirit in being transformed.

Then, asking for revival every day will bring it, if we add the next 3 principles.

2.  Deal with the next sin God is pointing out.

What is God convicting me of?  This “next sin” is often something that appears to be small, unimportant, (grouchiness, unnecessary snacks, staying up too late, etc) but is a key to a significant issue in my life.  Deal with it: name it, confess it, forsake it.

—“What we believe we obey; all the rest is religious talk” Adrian Rogers.

3.  Confess ahead.

Another small act that adds up.  It is powerful to regularly confess my tendency to commit certain sins (at present I have a list of 42!), ask for help and commit to obedience.  Doing this reminds me of my weaknesses, helps me to be alert to my tendency to react naturally, and to instead choose the supernatural response.

4.  Be aware of how our worldview blinds and binds us.

Ask God to help us discern what is of the world, the flesh and the devil so we can reject them and do the opposite, obeying Him.

If we Live by these principles,  your love will  “abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless until the day of Christ, filled with the fruit of righteousness…to the glory and praise of God.” Phil 1:9-11

Things To Teach Our Children Part 6

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Teaching our children about the goodness of God.

I reached for my wallet and then realized that I had forgotten it when I changed pants before going shopping. Now I will have to drive all the way home for my credit card and then back again to get this part for my mower so I can get the lawn mowed before it rains tonight.

This situation presents me with a choice; I can get upset and grumble, or I can praise God for His goodness, guidance and protection while I’m driving home with the kids.

If I complain, I will communicate to the my sons that God is not always good—“Why didn’t He remind me to take my wallet? Look at all the time I’ve wasted. It just isn’t fair.”

On the other hand, if I choose to praise, I can build into my children’s lives the knowledge that our God is always good, always at work for good, no matter how things may appear.

God knows what He’s doing in allowing our mistakes. For one thing, I now have this much more time to spend with the boys in the car, giving their mother a quiet afternoon. I have the chance to help them “catch” faith through my positive response.  Psalm 50:23, Romans 8:28, 2 Cor 12:9,10 give us plenty of biblical support for responding in trust to whatever comes. I can talk with them about these verses that I’ve memorized. I can help them memorize one as we drive.

As we provide continuing examples  for our children of how to respond with praise and trust in a good God, this will build faith into them in a way that ten thousand Sunday School classes couldn’t match.

The bigger the event, the more powerful the lesson.  When they see how I respond to having an accident, to losing my job or to being treated badly by the neighbor, I am either setting them free to praise or binding them to selfishness.

God is good, all the time. Let’s live that truth before our family, giving glory to God and faith to them.

Poem of Worship 2 from Psalm 118

Psa 118:6  “The LORD is with me; I will not be afraid.
What can man do to me?”

You, O Lord God, are Trustable, men are manipulative;
you are Mighty, men are microscopic;
you are Eternal, men are momentary;
you are Infinite, men are minuscule;
you are All-seeing, men are myopic;
you are in the future, men are mired in the now;
you are good by nature, men are manifestly evil by the fall;
you are loving, men are madly selfish.

Therefore:

To believe you is always best

To trust you is always wise,
To take refuge in you is always good,
To rest in you is always possible.
Praise be to you, Lord Jesus:
Creator,
King,
Lord,
Savior,
Judge
Victor

Things To Teach Our Children Part 3

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Teaching our children how to understand the difference between needs and wants.

The little girl looked up at me and said, “I NEED a cookie!”  She expected immediate compliance on my part. For many of us the advertising world has erased the line between needs and wants, thereby trapping us in a great unhappiness  of unfulfilled “needs.”

To know that our basic needs are air, water, food, clothing, shelter, love, purpose and wisdom, frees us to look at everything else as optional. And that’s what everything else is!

To have a TV is nice, but not necessary. Computers, internet connection, cell phones and ice cream are all wants, not needs. To teach children the difference is to equip them to make wise choices for the rest of their lives.  Part of this is teaching them how to decide which wants to fulfill. Learning to properly evaluate a potential purchase leads us to wiser choices.

“I can do without this.”

“I don’t actually need this, but as I have extra money, I will buy it and share it with my brother.”

“Instead of buying this snack, which I don’t need, I think I’ll buy a card for my friend who is sick.”

“It would be nice to have a brand new car, but a good used one will get me to where I want to go–and it will protect me from years of unwanted payments and interest charges!”

“It would be nice to go out for supper, but I don’t need that fattening food. I’ll invite my friend over for a good healthy supper, and give what I saved to the homeless shelter.”

Knowing the difference between needs and wants is a need!

How about us parents? Do we know the difference between a need and a want so we can teach our kids?

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Things To Teach Our Children Part 2

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Teaching our children to accept “No.”

The little boy stamped his feet, then threw himself on the floor of the store, screaming at the top of his lungs. His father stood there bewildered, holding the toy he’d taken from the boy. His “no” had been met with a challenge. And as the rest of the customers looked on, the father caved in and said, “Ok, ok, you can have it. Stop crying!”

In a contrasting incident, while sitting in the back of a church meeting, a grandfather leaned over and drew a line on the floor with his finger. “Do not cross this line. You can play here, but not over there.” His two year old grandson looked at him and stuck his foot across the line. He paused and looked again at his grandfather. “No!” said the grandfather firmly. The little boy drew back, got his truck and began to contentedly play in the designated area. Everyone was happy.

If we do not teach our children to accept “no” from us, we will cripple them, for life is full of “NOs.” Some come from us. There are things that are wrong, and we protect them by refusing to let them do those things. A clear line drawn with a firm, enforced “no” will keep them from harming themselves and others with rebellious, out-of-control behavior.

Some “NOs” come from others: teachers, police, bosses, leaders. To teach them to wisely accept a “no” means to submit to authority, to surrender, to give up our rebellion. Teaching this to a child empowers them to deal with life.

If we teach them to accept “no” from us, they will be able to say “no” to themselves, opening the door to a disciplined and fruitful life. They will also be able to say “no” to other people who seek to use them, manipulate them or harm them.   Without a grasp on “no,” a child is adrift on the sea of choices, unable to determine what is good and what is not.

Most importantly, teaching them to accept “no” will open the way to their denying self and following Jesus in belief, in life in service.

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God Wants To Partner With Us

“He is a shield to all those who take refuge in him.” Ps 18:30

This verse is a clear statement of God’s way with us: partnership. You, Lord, prepare all and then wait for us to respond: those who take refuge are the ones shielded.  You alert us, call us, show us multiple times what your will is, and wait. When we join you, then you act again, taking us a step further.  When we take refuge in you, you shield us, not before. It is not automatic, you require cooperation and wait for our response. This principle is all through Scripture.

You provided salvation, we must believe: “…to all who received him [Jesus], to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.” John 1:12

You give the Holy Spirit, we must surrender and ask to be filled: “be filled with the Spirit.” Eph 5:18

You call us to stay in fellowship with you, we must decide to do so: “I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.” John 15:5

You give direction in your Word, we must read and obey: “…the man who looks intently into the perfect law that gives freedom, and continues to do this, not forgetting what he has heard, but doing it—he will be blessed in what he does.” James 1:25

 

You give input on what to do or avoid, we must pay attention and follow your lead: “The commands of the LORD are radiant, giving light to the eyes….By them is your servant warned; in keeping them there is great reward.” Psalm 19:9b,11

You provided spiritual armor for us, we must put it on: “Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes.” Elphesians 6:11

You call us to trust you and glorify you in the midst of difficulty, we must obey: “He who sacrifices thank offerings honors me, and he prepares the way so that I may show him the salvation of God.”  Psalm 50:23

You show us needs around us, we must pray about them and give help: “be alert and always keep on praying for all the saints.” Eph 6:18b “Suppose a brother or sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to him, ‘Go, I wish you well; keep warm and well fed,’ but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it?” James 2:15,16

Your Spirit gives conviction of sin, we must listen and repent: “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” 1 John 1:9

As we join you in your call to partnership,  you are glorified, we grow, the gospel goes out, good is done, creation goes towards redemption and history towards its conclusion.

 

Praise you for giving us a significant role in life with you, praise you that you choose to share with us a part in your great plan, that we can join you in seeing the world reached, believers matured and you glorified. Show me where I am not joining you so I can repent and obey.

The Eagle and the Chickens

From a sermon I heard a couple of weeks ago

A farmer found a large egg in his field, brought it home and put it under his setting hen. It hatched out with the others, producing a large, scraggily baby. The farmer wasn’t sure what it was, but by the time it was 3 months old, it was obvious that it was an eagle.

However, no one told the young bird that it was an eagle, so it behaved just like all its companions. It pecked in the dirt, walked about the chicken yard and roosted in the coop at night. It had no idea of its capacity to fly, soar, hunt and eat wild game.  The eagle spent its life on the ground, acting like a chicken, dying like a chicken.

This is what many Christians are like. They come to Christ in a church where everyone acts like a chicken, so they act the same.  How do chickens act? They have a flock mentality, all doing the same thing.  If the flock attacks one member, they all attack, pecking it to death. Mother hens are noted for protecting their young, but once the young are grown, the hen will attack it if the rest of the flock does so. If the flock has no water, they may peck at each other to get blood to drink. They look down, not up, picking grains off the floor to eat, and then eating them again after they’ve been through their system. They fight over little things: they all want the same grain of corn. They don’t look up, or try their wings or try anything new.  They live in fear, huddling together to the point where they can smother each other.

Eagles, however, are fundamentally different.  They think wide and high. They work as a team, building their nest together, feeding their young together, and cooperate in teaching them to fly. They look around them and notice what is going on. They take chances. They try new things. They eat a wide variety of food. They fly high and wide, using the currents to carry them far.

Christians who live like eagles look to Jesus for their model, not the flock. They help others rather than attacking the weak. They cooperate, leaving the old behind, forgiving and letting go. They use the winds of opposition to lift them closer to God, higher in their ministry, wider in their vision.  They see the beauty around them and thrive on it. They stay strong to the end.

“…those who hope in the LORD
will renew their strength.
They will soar on wings like eagles;
they will run and not grow weary,
they will walk and not be faint.” Isaiah 40:31

So which will you be? A chicken or an eagle?

 

Three Types of Marriages

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There are at least three types of marriages:

Competitive

Capitulative

Cooperative

 

A Competitive Marriage.

My marriage was a competitive one: a struggle for power, getting my way and being comfortable. My wife and I are both first born and she is an only child. We are from different cultures and languages, besides having very different family cultures and being male and female. This is a  prescription for conflict!

How often did we have this little conversation: “You didn’t do that right!” “I assume that means ‘you didn’t do that the way I do it.’”

Interestingly enough, in the beginning we were unaware that we were competing.  But when someone told me about these three types of marriage, everything came into focus.

As a believer, I want to have a cooperative marriage. It all hung on me as the leader, and, since the Lord has made us aware of our competitiveness,  for the last few years we have been moving away from competition to cooperation.

One thing that was helpful was learning in Gary Chapman’s book about the five languages of love (gifts, quality time, words of affirmation, touch and service). We have no overlap in these and were confused that the other didn’t respond to our efforts to show love in our way.

Knowing that my wife’s two primary love languages are quality time and gifts (both requiring great self denial on my part!) and mine being words of affirmation and touch, helped us move towards working together instead of against each other.

A second help was when a friend taught us about “fight words” and “spite words.” My wife’s family uses fight words all the time. Direct accusations abound. “WHY did you do that?!!!” (hear a lot of force and a hard edge in the voice). “You ALWAYS leave the door open” (meaning, I’d like you to shut the door). “You ALWAYS break things and NEVER fix them” (meaning, I want to use this and it’s broken).

On my side are spite words. I’ve never said this, but have thought it enough: “Well, if that’s the way you feel, get yourself another husband!!!!”  A lot of competition there!

A third help was learning our motives in competing. For my wife it was often the desire for security. For me it was the desire for success and significance. Learning to draw both from our relationship with Christ, rather than our marriage set us free of a lot of conflict. But learning this is a process, no instant change here.

Learning to think in “we terms”, as a team, appreciating and using each other’s strengths has also helped. So has discerning what is important and what is not. I can let go of an awful lot when I look at things from eternity’s perspective.

If you’d like more helpful principles, get the book Knowing Jesus is Enough for Joy, Period! Check the top of the blog for a link.

A Capitulative Marriage

My in-laws’ marriage was a capitulative one.  That is, there was attack followed by surrender. Issues were buried to fester and reappear when the attacker was again dissatisfied. Everyone was unhappy.

My father-in-law, an intelligent, well read man, grew up without a father in a peace-filled family.  He responded to conflict by withdrawing, giving in. His wife grew up in a rough, argumentative and unhappy family of strong personalities. She responded to unhappiness by attacking.

My father-in-law wanted his peace and tried to get it by avoiding conflict, but only managed to prolonged it, for his wife would not let go of what she wanted.

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Such marriages are characterized by “surrender talk” on the part of the husband. “My wife won’t let me….” “She will object, so I can’t….”  In these statements he is making her the leader.  He is surrendering  in his thoughts as well as his actions to her bullying. He is not being responsible in his role as leader.

True “leadership talk” is the opposite. “My wife doesn’t like it when I drive aggressively, so because I love her, I choose to protect her from unnecessary stress by driving carefully.” The husband here is taking his responsibility as leader to make a decision, one which takes into consideration his wife’s likes and needs. He is making the decision, not her. Very different from capitulation.

No one is happy in a captiulative marriage, no matter who capitulates. Fear reigns on one side, frustration on the other. My wife and her father were constantly afraid of her mother’s rants, calling her the “Master Sargent.”  The relationship in the end drove my father-in-law into a deep depression that in the end led to his death. The sad truth is that he himself was responsible, for he failed to step up to the plate and lead.

A Cooperative Marriage.

To see each other as partners, each one bringing strengths and gifts, as well as weaknesses, opens the way to working together. Add to this mix the biblical leadership of the husband being accepted by both partners and you have the prescription for a great marriage.

The word “husband” is an agricultural one meaning “to care for, nurture, make fruitful.” That’s what he’s supposed to do in his marriage: care for, protect, nurture his wife and her abilities within the marriage. When a woman has a husband like that, voluntary submission is not hard, says my wife. This is not the “media image” of a Christian wife who is squashed by a domineering husband. Just the opposite.

There are, of course, conflicts and adjustments along the way, but as each knows his and her role, as things are discussed, as each learns to give and take, the outcome is a positive harmony  and cooperation.

It is a journey with changes and challenges, failures and restarts, (as we can tell you from 37 years of experience) but when the basic understanding is there and the husband leads with love and wisdom, and the wife voluntarily submits and supports with her advice and perspective, then you get the proper partnership that God intended.

 

So, which do you want for a marriage: competitive, captiulative or cooperative? Discern which yours is and work together to move towards cooperation.

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Four Elements of A Rich, Transforming Quiet Time

In my experience, a good, solid, practical, profitable, God-honoring quiet time has at least four main elements:

Transforming Worship

Transparent Confession

Totally Committed Reading of the Word

Tenacious Intercession

Let’s look at these one at a time.

Transforming Worship

I start my quiet time with worship, a focus on God and His marvelous character, giving Him praise and glory and honor for who He is without focusing primarily on how that benefits me. Using the Psalms is helpful, as His wonderful characteristics are revealed there consistently.

Such worship brings us into the light of His presence and transforms us. We may not see or notice this, but it happens in His presence. As 2 Corinthians 3:18 says, “And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.” ESV

Transparent Confession

Standing in His presence gives the Holy Spirit opportunity to point out unnoticed and unconfessed sin, often from the last few hours: a negative attitude, impatience, a harsh word spoken, a selfish motive, a lustful thought. We can and must be totally transparent in confession, knowing that God is “good, and ready to forgive; and plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon thee.” (Psalm 86:5, KJV)  And also knowing that He already knows each sin, so we have nothing to hide. Such confession brings a greater filling of the Spirit, more joy and more effectiveness for Him.

Totally Committed Reading of the Word

Then comes delving into the Word, with a total commitment to be open to the Spirit’s leadership. As we read, He will point out to us areas where we have not yet aligned our will with His. This should result in a continuing world-view shift in our lives, bringing us more and more into the light, love and joy He has for us.

Tenacious Intercession

Praying for others should flow out of this time with God, a desire for others to experience what God is doing in our lives. We can pray for our family, our church, our believing friends, our unbelieving friends, the spread of the gospel and the growth of the church worldwide. Perhaps not all every day, but a cycle of working through these prayer responsibilities we have been given.

If we are praying in line with Scripture for the great, wide, high and deep desires of God, some answers may be years in coming. Therefore we need to be tenacious, persistent, committed to pray until God says, “Yes,” or “No,” or “Enough.” An example of how important this persistence is can be seen in my father’s coming to Christ. I started praying for his salvation when I was 6 and he came to Christ 52 years later. My siblings also were praying for him during those years. Persistence pays off when we are following God’s leading.

So, walk further into the light, higher into the Kingdom, closer with Jesus by including these in your quiet time:

Transforming Worship

Transparent Confession

Totally Committed Reading of the Word

Tenacious Intercession